Stoya tells the New York Times that there’s a lot people can learn about privacy from porn performers: “Maybe it would be easier to navigate the dissolving boundaries between public and private spaces if we all had a variety of names with which to signal the aspects of ourselves currently on display.”

Indian sex worker activists asked candidates for all forty-two seats in the upcoming elections to agree to their demands for sex work to be listed in the labor department’s list of professions, for offending sections of the Anti-Trafficking Act to be abolished, and for the government to recognize an autonomous board of sex workers. Otherwise, sixty-five thousand registered Indian sex workers will not be voting for them.

Scottish sex workers’ rights group SCOT-PEP is calling for the closure of the Invisible Men exhibit at Glasgow’s Gallery of Modern Art. The exhibit consists of a series of featureless white masks, with selected quotes (the ones that happen to be violent and misogynistic, of course) from clients on review board sites superimposed on them. Sex workers representing SCOT-PEP wrote in a statement that, “The exhibition depicts sex workers as faceless, excludes the voices of sex workers and uses depictions of sex workers in intimate or even distressing situations without those women’s consent.”

The Republican candidate running for Minnesota Secretary of State dropped out of the race after it was revealed he went to a strip club after announcing his candidacy.

Mad Men’s Elisabeth Moss told New York, “My job is to get up, and get dressed in someone else’s clothes, and go and pretend that I’m someone else. Who does that? Nobody does that. Strippers and actors do that.”

A group of sex workers from the Tunisian city of Sousse protested in front of the National Constituent Assembly building on Tuesday, demanding that their officially-sanctioned brothel be reopened after over a year of inactivity.

The porn industry is preparing for a stand-off with anti-pornography feminists in London this weekend, over the Stop Porn Culture conference, organized by usual suspects Gail Dines and Julie Bindel, which porn industry reps say is aimed at “censoring sexual expression in the UK.” Porn performers are planning a Don’t Censor Me rally in response.